<h2><SPAN name="XV" id="XV"></SPAN>XV</h2>
<br/>
<p><i>Davis's Proclamation for Privateers—Lincoln's
Proclamation of Blockade—The Call for Three Years'
Volunteers—Southern Military Preparations—Rebel Capital
Moved to Richmond—Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee and
Arkansas Admitted to Confederate States—Desertion of Army and
Navy Officers—Union Troops Fortify Virginia Shore of the
Potomac—Concentration at Harper's Ferry—Concentration
at Fortress Monroe and Cairo—English
Neutrality—Seward's 21st-of-May Despatch—Lincoln's
Corrections—Preliminary Skirmishes—Forward to
Richmond—Plan of McDowell's Campaign</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>From the slower political developments in the border slave
States we must return and follow up the primary hostilities of the
rebellion. The bombardment of Sumter, President Lincoln's call for
troops, the Baltimore riot, the burning of Harper's Ferry armory
and Norfolk navy-yard, and the interruption of railroad
communication which, for nearly a week, isolated the capital and
threatened it with siege and possible capture, fully demonstrated
the beginning of serious civil war.</p>
<p>Jefferson Davis's proclamation, on April 17, of intention to
issue letters of marque, was met two days later by President
Lincoln's counter-proclamation instituting a blockade of the
Southern ports, and declaring that privateers would be held
amenable to the laws against piracy. His first call for
seventy-five thousand three <SPAN name="page206" id="page206"></SPAN>months' militia was dictated as to
numbers by the sudden emergency, and as to form and term of service
by the provisions of the Act of 1795. It needed only a few days to
show that this form of enlistment was both cumbrous and inadequate;
and the creation of a more powerful army was almost immediately
begun. On May 3 a new proclamation was issued, calling into service
42,034 three years' volunteers, 22,714 enlisted men to add ten
regiments to the regular army, and 18,000 seamen for blockade
service: a total immediate increase of 82,748, swelling the entire
military establishment to an army of 156,861 and a navy of
25,000.</p>
<p>No express authority of law yet existed for these measures; but
President Lincoln took the responsibility of ordering them,
trusting that Congress would legalize his acts. His confidence was
entirely justified. At the special session which met under his
proclamation, on the fourth of July, these acts were declared
valid, and he was authorized, moreover, to raise an army of a
million men and $250,000,000 in money to carry on the war to
suppress the rebellion; while other legislation conferred upon him
supplementary authority to meet the emergency.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the first effort of the governors of the loyal States
was to furnish their quotas under the first call for militia. This
was easy enough as to men. It required only a few days to fill the
regiments and forward them to the State capitals and principal
cities; but to arm and equip them for the field on the spur of the
moment was a difficult task which involved much confusion and
delay, even though existing armories and foundries pushed their
work to the utmost and new ones were established. Under the militia
call, the governors appointed all the officers required by their
respective quotas, from company lieutenant to <SPAN name="page207" id="page207"></SPAN>major-general
of division; while under the new call for three years' volunteers,
their authority was limited to the simple organization of
regiments.</p>
<p>In the South, war preparation also immediately became active.
All the indications are that up to their attack on Sumter, the
Southern leaders hoped to effect separation through concession and
compromise by the North. That hope, of course, disappeared with
South Carolina's opening guns, and the Confederate government made
what haste it could to meet the ordeal it dreaded even while it had
provoked it. The rebel Congress was hastily called together, and
passed acts recognizing war and regulating privateering; admitting
Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas to the
Confederate States; authorizing a $50,000,000 loan; practically
confiscating debts due from Southern to Northern citizens; and
removing the seat of government from Montgomery, Alabama, to
Richmond, Virginia.</p>
<p>Four different calls for Southern volunteers had been made,
aggregating 82,000 men; and Jefferson Davis's message now proposed
to further organize and hold in readiness an army of 100,000. The
work of erecting forts and batteries for defense was being rapidly
pushed at all points: on the Atlantic coast, on the Potomac, and on
the Mississippi and other Western streams. For the present the
Confederates were well supplied with cannon and small arms from the
captured navy-yards at Norfolk and Pensacola and the six or eight
arsenals located in the South. The martial spirit of their people
was roused to the highest enthusiasm, and there was no lack of
volunteers to fill the companies and regiments which the
Confederate legislators authorized Davis to accept, either by
regular calls on State executives in accordance with, <SPAN name="page208" id="page208"></SPAN>or singly
in defiance of, their central dogma of States Rights, as he might
prefer.</p>
<p>The secession of the Southern States not only strengthened the
rebellion with the arms and supplies stored in the various military
and naval depots within their limits, and the fortifications
erected for their defense: what was of yet greater help to the
revolt, a considerable portion of the officers of the army and
navy—perhaps one third—abandoned the allegiance which
they had sworn to the United States, and, under the false doctrine
of State supremacy taught by Southern leaders, gave their
professional skill and experience to the destruction of the
government which had educated and honored them. The defection of
Robert E. Lee was a conspicuous example, and his loss to the Union
and service to the rebel army cannot easily be measured. So, also,
were the similar cases of Adjutant-General Cooper and
Quartermaster-General Johnston. In gratifying contrast stands the
steadfast loyalty and devotion of Lieutenant-General Winfield
Scott, who, though he was a Virginian and loved his native State,
never wavered an instant in his allegiance to the flag he had
heroically followed in the War of 1812, and triumphantly planted
over the capital of Mexico in 1847. Though unable to take the
field, he as general-in-chief directed the assembling and first
movements of the Union troops.</p>
<p>The largest part of the three months' regiments were ordered to
Washington city as the most important position in a political, and
most exposed in a military point of view. The great machine of war,
once started, moved, as it always does, by its own inherent energy
from arming to concentration, from concentration to skirmish and
battle. It was not long before Washington was a military camp.
Gradually the <SPAN name="page209" id="page209"></SPAN>hesitation to "invade" the "sacred soil" of
the South faded out under the stern necessity to forestall an
invasion of the equally sacred soil of the North; and on May 24 the
Union regiments in Washington crossed the Potomac and planted
themselves in a great semicircle of formidable earthworks eighteen
miles long on the Virginia shore, from Chain Bridge to Hunting
Creek, below Alexandria.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, a secondary concentration of force developed itself
at Harper's Ferry, forty-nine miles northwest of Washington. When,
on April 20, a Union detachment had burned and abandoned the armory
at that point, it was at once occupied by a handful of rebel
militia; and immediately thereafter Jefferson Davis had hurried his
regiments thither to "sustain" or overawe Baltimore; and when that
prospect failed, it became a rebel camp of instruction. Afterward,
as Major-General Patterson collected his Pennsylvania quota, he
turned it toward that point as a probable field of operations. As a
mere town, Harper's Ferry was unimportant; but, lying on the
Potomac, and being at the head of the great Shenandoah valley, down
which not only a good turnpike, but also an effective railroad ran
southeastward to the very heart of the Confederacy, it was, and
remained through the entire war, a strategical line of the first
importance, protected, as the Shenandoah valley was, by the main
chain of the Alleghanies on the west and the Blue Ridge on the
east.</p>
<p>A part of the eastern quotas had also been hurried to Fortress
Monroe, Virginia, lying at the mouth of Chesapeake Bay, which
became and continued an important base for naval as well as
military operations. In the West, even more important than St.
Louis was the little town of Cairo, lying at the extreme southern<SPAN name="page210" id="page210"></SPAN> end of the State of Illinois, at the
confluence of the Ohio River with the Mississippi. Commanding, as
it did, thousands of miles of river navigation in three different
directions, and being also the southernmost point of the earliest
military frontier, it had been the first care of General Scott to
occupy it; and, indeed, it proved itself to be the military key of
the whole Mississippi valley.</p>
<p>It was not an easy thing promptly to develop a military policy
for the suppression of the rebellion. The so-called Confederate
States of America covered a military field having more than six
times the area of Great Britain, with a coast-line of over
thirty-five hundred miles, and an interior frontier of over seven
thousand miles. Much less was it possible promptly to plan and set
on foot concise military campaigns to reduce the insurgent States
to allegiance. Even the great military genius of General Scott was
unable to do more than suggest a vague outline for the work. The
problem was not only too vast, but as yet too indefinite, since the
political future of West Virginia, Kentucky, and Missouri still
hung in more or less uncertainty.</p>
<p>The passive and negligent attitude which the Buchanan
administration had maintained toward the insurrection during the
whole three months between the presidential election and Mr.
Lincoln's inauguration, gave the rebellion an immense advantage in
the courts and cabinets of Europe. Until within three days of the
end of Buchanan's term not a word of protest or even explanation
was sent to counteract the impression that disunion was likely to
become permanent. Indeed, the non-coercion doctrine of Buchanan's
message was, in the eyes of European statesmen, equivalent to an
acknowledgment of such a result; and the formation of the
Confederate government, followed so quickly <SPAN name="page211" id="page211"></SPAN>by the
fall of Fort Sumter, seemed to them a practical realization of
their forecast. The course of events appeared not merely to fulfil
their expectations, but also, in the case of England and France,
gratified their eager hopes. To England it promised cheap cotton
and free trade with the South. To France it appeared to open the
way for colonial ambitions which Napoleon III so soon set on foot
on an imperial scale.</p>
<p>Before Charles Francis Adams, whom President Lincoln appointed
as the new minister to England, arrived in London and obtained an
interview with Lord John Russell, Mr. Seward had already received
several items of disagreeable news. One was that, prior to his
arrival, the Queen's proclamation of neutrality had been published,
practically raising the Confederate States to the rank of a
belligerent power, and, before they had a single privateer afloat,
giving these an equality in British ports with United States ships
of war. Another was that an understanding had been reached between
England and France which would lead both governments to take the
same course as to recognition, whatever that course might be.
Third, that three diplomatic agents of the Confederate States were
in London, whom the British minister had not yet seen, but whom he
had caused to be informed that he was not unwilling to see
unofficially.</p>
<p>Under the irritation produced by this hasty and equivocal action
of the British government, Mr. Seward wrote a despatch to Mr. Adams
under date of May 21, which, had it been sent in the form of the
original draft, would scarcely have failed to lead to war between
the two nations. While it justly set forth with emphasis and
courage what the government of the United States would endure and
what it would not endure from foreign powers during the Southern
<SPAN name="page212" id="page212"></SPAN>insurrection, its phraseology, written in
a heat of indignation, was so blunt and exasperating as to imply
intentional disrespect.</p>
<p>When Mr. Seward read the document to President Lincoln, the
latter at once perceived its objectionable tone, and retained it
for further reflection. A second reading confirmed his first
impression. Thereupon, taking his pen, the frontier lawyer, in a
careful revision of the whole despatch, so amended and changed the
work of the trained and experienced statesman, as entirely to
eliminate its offensive crudeness, and bring it within all the
dignity and reserve of the most studied diplomatic courtesy. If,
after Mr. Seward's remarkable memorandum of April 1, the Secretary
of State had needed any further experience to convince him of the
President's mastery in both administrative and diplomatic judgment,
this second incident afforded him the full evidence.</p>
<p>No previous President ever had such a sudden increase of
official work devolve upon him as President Lincoln during the
early months of his administration. The radical change of parties
through which he was elected not only literally filled the White
House with applicants for office, but practically compelled a
wholesale substitution of new appointees for the old, to represent
the new thought and will of the nation. The task of selecting these
was greatly complicated by the sharp competition between the
heterogeneous elements of which the Republican party was composed.
This work was not half completed when the Sumter bombardment
initiated active rebellion, and precipitated the new difficulty of
sifting the loyal from the disloyal, and the yet more pressing
labor of scrutinizing the organization of the immense new volunteer
army called into service by the proclamation of May 3. Mr.
<SPAN name="page213" id="page213"></SPAN> Lincoln used often to say at this period,
when besieged by claims to appointment, that he felt like a man
letting rooms at one end of his house, while the other end was on
fire. In addition to this merely routine work was the much more
delicate and serious duty of deciding the hundreds of novel
questions affecting the constitutional principles and theories of
administration.</p>
<p>The great departments of government, especially those of war and
navy, could not immediately expedite either the supervision or
clerical details of this sudden expansion, and almost every case of
resulting confusion and delay was brought by impatient governors
and State officials to the President for complaint and correction.
Volunteers were coming rapidly enough to the various rendezvous in
the different States, but where were the rations to feed them,
money to pay them, tents to shelter them, uniforms to clothe them,
rifles to arm them, officers to drill and instruct them, or
transportation to carry them? In this carnival of patriotism, this
hurly-burly of organization, the weaknesses as well as the virtues
of human nature quickly developed themselves, and there was
manifest not only the inevitable friction of personal rivalry, but
also the disturbing and baneful effects of occasional falsehood and
dishonesty, which could not always be immediately traced to the
responsible culprit. It happened in many instances that there were
alarming discrepancies between the full paper regiments and
brigades reported as ready to start from State capitals, and the
actual number of recruits that railroad trains brought to the
Washington camps; and Mr. Lincoln several times ironically compared
the process to that of a man trying to shovel a bushel of fleas
across a barn floor.</p>
<p>While the month of May insensibly slipped away amid these
preparatory vexations, camps of instruction <SPAN name="page214" id="page214"></SPAN>rapidly
grew to small armies at a few principal points, even under such
incidental delay and loss; and during June the confronting Union
and Confederate forces began to produce the conflicts and
casualties of earnest war. As yet they were both few and
unimportant: the assassination of Ellsworth when Alexandria was
occupied; a slight cavalry skirmish at Fairfax Court House; the
rout of a Confederate regiment at Philippi, West Virginia; the
blundering leadership through which two Union detachments fired
upon each other in the dark at Big Bethel, Virginia; the ambush of
a Union railroad train at Vienna Station; and Lyon's skirmish,
which scattered the first collection of rebels at Boonville,
Missouri. Comparatively speaking all these were trivial in numbers
of dead and wounded—the first few drops of blood before the
heavy sanguinary showers the future was destined to bring. But the
effect upon the public was irritating and painful to a degree
entirely out of proportion to their real extent and gravity.</p>
<p>The relative loss and gain in these affairs was not greatly
unequal. The victories of Philippi and Boonville easily offset the
disasters of Big Bethel and Vienna. But the public mind was not yet
schooled to patience and to the fluctuating chances of war. The
newspapers demanded prompt progress and ample victory as
imperatively as they were wont to demand party triumph in politics
or achievement in commercial enterprise. "Forward to Richmond,"
repeated the "New York Tribune," day after day, and many sheets of
lesser note and influence echoed the cry. There seemed, indeed, a
certain reason for this clamor, because the period of enlistment of
the three months' regiments was already two thirds gone, and they
were not yet all armed and equipped for field service.<SPAN name="page215" id="page215"></SPAN></p>
<p>President Lincoln was fully alive to the need of meeting this
popular demand. The special session of Congress was soon to begin,
and to it the new administration must look, not only to ratify what
had been done, but to authorize a large increase of the military
force, and heavy loans for coming expenses of the war. On June 29,
therefore, he called his cabinet and principal military officers to
a council of war at the Executive Mansion, to discuss a more
formidable campaign than had yet been planned. General Scott was
opposed to such an undertaking at that time. He preferred waiting
until autumn, meanwhile organizing and drilling a large army, with
which to move down the Mississippi and end the war with a final
battle at New Orleans. Aside from the obvious military objections
to this course, such a procrastination, in the present irritation
of the public temper, was not to be thought of; and the old general
gracefully waived his preference and contributed his best judgment
to the perfecting of an immediate campaign into Virginia.</p>
<p>The Confederate forces in Virginia had been gathered by the
orders of General Lee into a defensive position at Manassas
Junction, where a railroad from Richmond and another from Harper's
Ferry come together. Here General Beauregard, who had organized and
conducted the Sumter bombardment, had command of a total of about
twenty-five thousand men which he was drilling. The Junction was
fortified with some slight field-works and fifteen heavy guns,
supported by a garrison of two thousand; while the main body was
camped in a line of seven miles' length behind Bull Run, a winding,
sluggish stream flowing southeasterly toward the Potomac. The
distance was about thirty-two miles southwest of Washington.
Another Confederate force of about ten thousand, under General
J.E.<SPAN name="page216" id="page216"></SPAN> Johnston, was collected at Winchester
and Harper's Ferry on the Potomac, to guard the entrance to the
Shenandoah valley; and an understanding existed between Johnston
and Beauregard, that in case either were attacked, the other would
come to his aid by the quick railroad transportation between the
two places.</p>
<p>The new Union plan contemplated that Brigadier-General McDowell
should march from Washington against Manassas and Bull Run, with a
force sufficient to beat Beauregard, while General Patterson, who
had concentrated the bulk of the Pennsylvania regiments in the
neighborhood of Harper's Ferry, in numbers nearly or quite double
that of his antagonist, should move against Johnston, and either
fight or hold him so that he could not come to the aid of
Beauregard. At the council McDowell emphasized the danger of such a
junction; but General Scott assured him: "If Johnston joins
Beauregard, he shall have Patterson on his heels." With this
understanding, McDowell's movement was ordered to begin on July
9.</p>
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